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Top Sunni Muslim group slams Egypt's death sentences for 683 Islamists

Relatives and families react in front of the court in Minya, after hearing the sentence handed to Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie and other Brotherhood supporters April 28, 2014.

Apr 30, 2014

A Qatar-based Sunni Muslim group led by influential cleric Sheikh Yusef al-Qaradawi has condemned as "politicised" an Egyptian court's decision to sentence hundreds of Islamists to death.

The court on Monday imposed death sentences on 683 suspected Islamists - including Muslim Brotherhood leader Mohamed Badie - amid a crackdown on supporters of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Mursi.

The Association of Muslim Scholars responded by saying it "rejects these verdicts coming from a court that takes orders from those who came to power in a military coup and govern Egypt using coercion and repression."

In a statement issued late on Tuesday, the Qatar-based organisation said the sentences were "politicised and considered an insult to justice" in Egypt.

The Minya court in southern Egypt is set to confirm the death sentences on June 21. It reversed 492 of 529 death sentences it passed in March, commuting most of them to life imprisonment.

Since the army toppled Mr Mursi in July 2013, a crackdown targeting his supporters has left more than 1,400 people dead and 15,000 in jail. Cleric Qaradawi, who was born in Egypt and is seen as a spiritual guide to the Brotherhood, issued a fatwa urging Egyptians to support Mr Mursi, following his overthrow. The cleric is himself wanted by Egypt's military-installed authorities and faces being tried in absentia.

Qatar had close ties with Egypt during Mr Mursi's turbulent single year in power but relations nosedived after his overthrow. The gas-rich Gulf state has given refuge to a number of Brotherhood leaders who fled the bloody crackdown that followed Mr Mursi's ouster.

Egypt has called on Qatar to respect a 1998 Arab counter-terrorism treaty and hand over the cleric and other wanted Islamists.